Sif 18 and ereditor liabilitics anl to above Ciges *A to «o ie I, C. F. GRANT, of the ai above statement is true to the best of my kn. and amounts shown a agree with items to the Auditor of Public Aecounts. State af N. The bank has outstanding $13,000,00 face amount of out Gf: anemalame oo 10 1MR FCmARCOAUT H h. C Tublication) _ S e REPORT oFr conprtfon or m@n PARK STATE BANK, itted in V‘m enll ‘af w o7 We cony ts ""her t t dutatrrulifretiind Highland to secure the n for such games minton, softball, Evening activities at the and Sunset playgrou: mm tended, by and |adults alike. | Those le who have not as yet taken tage of this opâ€" Pomnjg for tion ht&m_ nings are urged to visit one of these play centers evening.! The playground staff “b‘l"flhblv‘ organize groups ‘and also (#) (d) the F4 scientifically cleaned. It feels good to sleep under a blanket that is soft and fluffy, j It is healthy to breathe in that sweet scent that comes with our scientifically rlannaA LL..11 Playground Emnm(m‘ Grad_-Llly Increasing What a relief to know that your blankets Be really conffortable. For other z 400. E1 € reâ€"discounts).................... Against U,. 6. r postal savings deposits Against funds of State of .‘..“.-:.‘........M,-..........u Against â€"de . of : Trust t (Federal : Re Banks, only) .â€",5..â€".................. ibidiensatiem nousnddnoudia en t oo L9 ud d it is uow l orse shoes, and to its and .subordinated to all . :«-“uoc The Ahove ‘meased fl"m do splemniy Jif swear vthoh-nmwhovrhd-.jluhlhl.:flw ï¬-. agree with items and amounts shown in"the made ecountts, State of Illinois, pursuant toch;. * Â¥ : \ W. CUSHING: | J, M. APPEL,. Directon. â€"_‘_ _‘ a;.: thiee: Lake, ss, _ > \ 1t § to before me this 6th day of July 1985. â€"© ; 45 4 ssary equipment volley ball, badâ€" yo0. se t (Federal â€"Reserve Memher aits (War M“"Aheua'm'T::::::.'Z.".:l:f:ï¬:ï¬: ie ces n ie on ns e on tnne en c onnine etipeneit o ons terener oo o. cdu c Public to qualify for the Exercise of i Als »»~ ATR (Par onl of the Auditer of Publie Accounte. purrmint t Taw and -twew‘%u&mmallmlvw 4 }Mh’MWMM t > Lake Forest, Phone Enterprize 1775 No toll charge. j "eatne in that sweet scent that scientifically cleaned blankets. (Official Publication) _ Pledged to 'om"l"-h""uuï¬-"'""""? jand/or fully guaranteed ... The new Sunday School building project has been ‘dropped. fordit:.‘ present, o Plans are being made to have a reâ€"dedicatory servige on Aug. 25th, with Bishop C. H. Mengel of Allenâ€" town, Pa., officiating. | of new pews and. other uipment, is being taken care of a. comâ€" mittee consisting g the r, P. Brandfeliner, B. O‘ Pfl:ï¬h,c § :A Thorson, Henry Maech : Jasper Rhinehart, and Arnold Peterson. . The proposed changes in the audâ€" itorium of the First United Evanâ€" gelical Church and the installation poome se t omm D Mc _ Friday morning, July 4 Port Clinton and Lincoin groups to Beach ‘for swimming lessons ; vinia group to Rogers Williams Beach for s los» sons. Afternoonâ€"General at Linâ€" coln, Ravinia, Sunset, . Port ton. First U. E. Church To _ ~â€"â€"â€" Remodel Auditorium i DLia s OO CAE DCCT 2C CORe Mascoslt. Sunset at Lincoln; Ravinia at Port Clinton. coln : and : Ravinia. ; ‘ 'tm,y morning, July 17. baseâ€" ball : toln at Sunset ; linton at Ravinia, * rt Clinton, Lincoln groups to Central ; Ravinia ""}l’;’ to Rogers :‘nu.,-:b k ursday morning, base .h.l:i:kh.h at Sunset ; Pml' ou.u.: n Afternoonâ€"General ‘program M‘“‘_ Lhnoh_ and Ravinia playgrounds. week of July 15 is as 1 ws; :..lm Wm for .g.h..:,‘: w Clintom, Lhodn‘ M%l"lgh play . Tuesday morning, July 16â€"Boys‘ basebail : tennis. stments............$ 40,000.00 investments.... 2,875,399.18 , $10,000.00 B" debeutures payably solely subordinated to all deposit KRUEGER, Notary Public the Exercise of $2,415,3990:13 Ravinia at Port Clinton, rrsorieallf rd.m.z o_ â€"~50,000.00 motrcâ€"â€" â€" 140,606.74 o proap xm vaim~... 1,048,125.39 â€"â€"..88,884,087.42 N amex \ +. 468.81 f 3.000.00 141,141.35 /. +None .. Te9o.l1 847.151.12 708,003.64 $10,527.88 §62,442.15 18,518.36 None Home Insulation payse Leat m show you how Ralph Steel Serdens : â€" Roofs â€" Mill Work H.P.1871 | â€" m Central Ave. finished â€"the . The contest was nip and tuck for six innings with the winners leadâ€" ing throughout. Flive Deerfield runs in the seventh ghve the contest a oneâ€"sided aspect uhtil a sixâ€"run rally by Orchard Place in the .last innâ€" ing di.r-’tonod to keep Deerfield out of the winning column. With the score 13 to 6 in favor of Deerfield Pritchard, who hadn‘t pitched since the opening game at Park Ridge, relieved Blair, was hit for two triples, one coming with the t:uq: (loaded. 4 runs scoring. Gaines Your house can be cool and comâ€" fortable when it is blistering hot outside. . ROCK WOOL BATS joists gives your homie a perfect temperature at all times. Jim McDermott‘s Cireus of Deer: field beat Orchard qmm 13 to 10 in a Northwest League game at Evanâ€" Last Sunday'rig; A. Roth won the blind â€" bogey w a 96â€"12â€"84 and Joe â€"Davis ed into second place with a gross 81. In the quarter finals of the President‘s Cup Geo. Bliss beat Red Fell 3 and 2. B ‘ probably had the luckiest shot of the â€"season whe ‘he topped his ba with a 7 iron on the 8th tee, hit the bridge across the creek, bounced off to a tree, bz:‘dod back to the bridge again, 1 the bridge to the Woog cover on the water hyâ€" drant, from there to the green,. If you (believe.this, George will tell you another.. & Deerfield Wins Game é from OrcHard Place Second place was Howard Hagâ€" gie‘s with a coui:lo'ot strokes to the rear. In the blind bo festival Oliver Weed, George Bliss, George Hutchinson, 8. % Roth, A. B. Haven $r., and R. M. Weeks 'tnre tied and Weed won the draw. "W. "Lucky" Flynn copped second fiddle. © Hot weather, we are told, must agree with Eddy Prosser because he "planted his flag‘" on the second gréen in ‘the Sunset Valley Flag tourney last week. . 4 A new kind of contest being sponâ€" sored Labor Day by men in the varâ€" ious departments of the Jackson Edward Prosser Wins ‘in Flag Tournament Summer Comfort According to a study made by the Chicago Association of Commerce, 34,448 cars pass daily over the Michâ€" igan Avenue bridge. While only 18,â€" 387 is the average of daily traffic on the famous London bridge, and 27,131 on the Brooklyn bridge. â€" er than the widely famed London bridge, or the Brooklyn bridge of New York _ f When you drive over Chicago‘s doubleâ€"decked | Michigan A venue bridge, you are crossing a bridge upon which the daily traffic is greatâ€" counters, oneâ€"armed chairs for knitâ€" ters, and knitting bags, are as conâ€" éerned over keeping it going as the wool mills. ; Tns oo Btd Started, makers of knitâ€" ting needles, needle gauges, stitch counters, oneâ€"armed chairs for knitâ€" . SBoon . after this . newspapers reâ€" ’qu?‘t the Prince was spending Adle mnlncut St. James Palace complacently knitting a sweater, and, incidentally, ‘setting an example which romantic American women soon followed. _ Another theory reported is that the knitting bag which Mrs. Roose: velt â€"always |carries inspired the present boom, But regardless of I" n : uidtht &m’d “"m‘n & ‘yarn, has his own private theory mbout how the boom started. He beâ€" lieves n-t it was caused by a letter which he sent to the Prince of Wales, in which he suggested that the Prince should take up knitting out of patriotic consideration of Engâ€" land‘s wool industries. to -fitmnldpmboflly stretch tnu#lnd round the world. . . . .. But we wondgr, how did this gigantic “‘%IMJ -nimblnï¬mrlcomoi ng needles continue to click 'ï¬di?u'cud\uiuu ‘ollow the fad. If all yarn were laid end: Now aND THEN game for Deerfleld. ©HE PRESS BOWMAN‘$ FRESH one night. But it is mushroom!" "There is a .growth 0 vegetation that arrives at full }doï¬loyment. in dent‘ The &rratic desire for rapid Paith in dainuatty * “;m an allegory on sound and i goals it moralizes:â€""The pursuit of wealth is | for the ‘glorious privilege of being indepenâ€" / In the same is an editorial ‘an Bunyan. It : "‘Go to it m-Enthn. lnb#o%l, and Teleâ€" 7 times!" | | A ~‘"The Highland Park Hotel is so full already that :ï¬}ndl‘ord had to gléep in the ch Business is ï¬m" good | with several other Highland Park â€" gentlemen." (We we mâ€ï¬‚l%* the same conâ€" ditions today.) ‘ f L _ July 1874 or s :_Items from the Highland Park News, which paper later became the nd Park Préess. No. 4, Vol. 1, July 1874: | | k | However, confinement to the secâ€" tions provided for animals in the rear funnel, is a dummy stack, must present a serious blem for some of the pets. _ Owners are invited to select daily menu sheets list selections which translated become Towser‘s Mixture, or the most popular meal of con. me. carrots, hashed chicken and odlues, of real dog dishes of buf.‘ ham, and veal bones. . Cats Ji.fl for $5.00, birds for $2.00, dogs, nwm of size or :;::.ï¬â€œ' for $20, e f Oh, l‘ek"fltl,‘}“do‘!. and birds! passage rates to Europe via gd;iormdio are not mrbih;‘t..} |It started se of the bragging of William B Platte County, Mo., farmer, that his mule had the widest ears of any mule in Missouri. &nwwr:ï¬wi.m owners of mules having the widest ear spt 50+ 5 BOW M A N: 2% m cool drink for \a | pour out a glassful of Buttermilk." It‘s paste f protection but . , . “mm‘..-‘ v grains of floating find it has the good try flayor." And what is more â€"â€" it‘ "|| RELIABLE LAUNDE Esmnl?xam:n 1894 The Milk of L?uw > sc s MIL# IS TH® W.OIOg!.H.m bortn in Bement, IIL, an only son of the late A. C. Stadler Sr. and Mrs. Accidental dnï¬"n;.:-w of the coroner‘s inquest. | Monday in| Summit. â€" Local men Attending DPr. W. F. Weir, Raiph Peterâ€" son and G. A. A. Willen, with Glen mpson of Glencoe. . mss d " ) S _ hn you want k ;‘"n}l pickâ€"meâ€"up, glassful 6of . Bowman‘s Sunday afternoon Albert Wilâ€" nnseunfmtmm wen 6 to identify the body. (Mr. Stadler was killed in automobile collision on Sunday, J 7, at 9:45 a.m. at 128rd Street Keene Avenue, Chicago.. The ver of the other car was Robert s of San Francisco, Calif. lie Reï¬?&*un†“JH | Good For You. Tank held Tuesday mt. HL, with interment in the Bement Cemeâ€" Stadler ?‘fl Auto g::h'[rsm,- for your A REALT Libertyville 290 Deerfield 228 . Send them to us for a thoro ing, in our own Dry Clean ask to have the natural color Our new method of handlin mentsâ€" will please you great brightness of the color and the garments when we ne‘:j 618 North Green Bay Road \ for l_tflrtnd\ .-Mï¬n with golden er . . . you‘lF â€"time "coun). it‘s a recogâ€" and Sued € \-:u:‘:wc.'w?ï¬'&*awf% Nere Nee n ty( Sioie e Highland Park 198 .â€" â€" Northbrook 23 SA e Highland Park lunches, Just O?keu'd for aid to a {dig « a bot ) readv fs | | VE R #4 COMP DAI for T3 m ickets _ 11 1 Hovpmerefianed | 52J . i uB 4 151 won to Mr, f";"' ;:u as a M, To n! a ock. B, [With Boy Scout ws : ployed for five years, Bburh: z to take & po d i ‘in | mpisegdions, . .. _ [ 19 deéath one yege mr mm . are hig ) x k mbc:: A.h .,: ) w *3 2o ‘opo e win ful cleanâ€" fut. and tored. Jeather garâ€" you ‘see the & newness of: w you. ‘Or, if you it ) N ES T â€" | JRSAD A 191 Aihe 6 491 m : "“"W :i: n“aï¬.*q It nan‘s Oldâ€" "‘HI I'la ; C. Stadier Jp. 18, ‘ 106th hn 1e mt Makamn . on family‘s Argonne Detail n e 5, 1918; debarker 9. Enea h c 7 . te J COnn pedt .. 4 n â€" f ~ taken Jo Seaet 6. . on "as ; JULY 44 ( u" Himeq t